In anticipation of this evening's Women's Theatre Festival Interest Meeting, artist/scholar Jules Odendahl-James has recapped the past few seasons of number crunching. She began this work for the July 2012 DASH gathering at the ArtsCenter, where she was invited to take part in a roundtable discussion that addressed gender equity in the Triangle theatre community. She is mindful to note that this data is not definitive. For instance, she does not yet have season information for HBCUs in the Triangle such as Shaw, St. Augustine and NCCU. These particular absences highlight the important role that university theaters play in these numbers and opens interesting questions for discussion about whether the interest in and work for women theater artists and artists of color extends in positive and life/art sustaining ways from the academy into the professional world.

Here’s more from here recap:The numbers mix together LORT professional, independent professional, community and educational theaters (including some student-run companies with long-running constituencies), and one-off productions by a group that forms to stage just one show with those companies which have staffs/buildings/long histories in the Triangle.

I follow a pretty strict geographical demarcation for “Triangle” theater, including only those productions/companies operating in Cary, Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill & Carrboro.

Even in the digital information age, it remains difficult to discern the artistic staff for shows (even after the shows are running). I would strongly urge theater companies/producers to put that information front and center as soon as it’s known and to make sure subsequent publicity maintains those details as things shift to archival status so these kind of statistics are easier to collect and dissect over the arc of time.

Overall Observations.Over the three seasons examined (12-13, 13-14, 14-15) and given the limitations of a one-woman statistics operation, numbers have remained relatively consistent for women directors and playwrights in the Triangle.

Depending how one:

counts co-authorship and co-directorship

tallies full stagings vs. staged readings

notes the compensation of artists in terms of directors who are local versus brought in from out of state; directors and writers who have long-standing relationships with companies; directors or writers who are themselves the ADs or MDs of companies vs. freelancers

and takes into consideration the wider contexts of community, educational, and independent professional to Equity professional...

Then one sees that:

Women-identified directors seem to hover around the 30-35% mark in terms of attachment to theater projects in the Triangle.

Women-identified playwrights seem to range from 15-25% in terms of programming on our stages.

If one looks at the racial composition of these percentages, writers of color across women and men seem to hover between 5-8% representation of a total number of Triangle shows and directors of color sit at about the same percentage range.

Plays written by artists of color are more typically directed by directors of color. Plays written by women, tend to be staffed by women directors.

What these trends/tendencies mean is a question too big for this post but one very much worth considering and discussing further as demographics change across the Triangle, the state of NC, and the US as a whole. And as we consider how theater as a profession and a discipline understands its past, grapples with its present, and maps its future.

BREAKDOWN of 2014-15 season14-15 statistics are pulled from production materials when/where made available in advance of a show’s production. With Devra Thomas's help this year, I’ve made some attempt to go back and ‘pick up’ shows that were announced late, mid-season, last minute.

Of 126 total productions tallied from July 31, 2014 to July 31, 2015.

31 women-identified playwrights (24.6%)

39 women-identified directors (31%)

These totals include artists credited with co-writing or co-directing.

Of 126, 11 shows had writing & direction by women (8.3%). I counted three instances where both the director and writer of a production were women-identified artists of color.

This tally EXCLUDES the 2015 10X10 Festival at ArtsCenter Stage, which itself had 70% representation of women directors (2 of 7 which were women of color) and a 20% representation of women playwrights (those two plays were directed by women).Only 8.3% of the total number of productions had women directors and writers. As in previous years, this means a healthy number of shows directed by women are shows written by women.

The 14-15 stats do not include children’s theater programming as that tends to skew historically in favor of women writers/adaptors and directors. It does not count women choreographers or musical directors for musicals. None of these numbers breaks down the representation of women directors in terms of local or out-of-town professional hired in by companies.

I'll admit a less than consistent approach to staged readings. This year I included full-length readings under the formal umbrella of The Process Series and those where there’s been advance promotion and a run of more than one night; however, I’ve excluded short play festivals.

BREAKDOWN of 2012-13 season Compiled in July of 2012 when 94 shows had been announced:

Directors of color (women and men): 6.5% (individuals who directed more than one show in a season for the same theater were only counted once)

Playwrights of color (women and men): 7.8%

BREAKDOWN of 2013-14 seasonCompiled in May of 2014, a total of 107 productions dating from August 1 2013 to July 31, 2014. Additionally, I started to separate out children’s theater production from the overall tally and started to note the number of staged readings separate from fully staged productions.

Of those 107 productions:

35 were made/written by women-identified writers (32.7%).

Of those 35, 8 were staged readings only.

Of those 35, 7 were by women of color.

Of those 107 productions:

34 productions were directed by women (31.7%).

Of those 34, 19 were plays by women with women-identified directors or co-directors (56% of 31.7%).

Of that 34, 4 were directed by women of color and 2 of those were directed by the same woman.

And of those 4, 3 were plays written by women of color; the other one was written by a man of color.

Additionally, in 2012, the Ladies of Triangle Theatre (LoTT) discussed the state of theater for ladies working in the Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill areas of North Carolina. It was livestreamed and archived on HowlRound. The panel discussion addressed women's positive and challenging experiences working in Triangle area theater. Participants hoped to shine a light on artistic directors who get it right and who need our support, and we wish to provide a path for those who need our wisdom and help. From this initial conversation, they wanted local artistic directors to examine how they choose their seasons and who they hire as actors, directors, playwrights, designers, and technicians for ultimately achieving a 50/50 balance of theater professionals. Click here to watch.

About Jules Odendahl-James

Jules Odendahl-James is an artist/scholar who has been making theater in the Triangle for over a decade. This season she has been the director of An Experiment with an Air Pump (Duke Theater Studies), the dramaturg for We Are Proud to Present a Presentation (Playmakers Repertory Company) and Brownsville Song (b-side for Tray) (Manbites Dog). She serves as the Research Director and interim-curator for Ladies of the Triangle Theatre and Vice-President of the Southeast Region for Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of the Americas. Jules is also an Associate Artistic Director at Manbites Dog Theater and an adjunct faculty at Duke University in the Department of Theater Studies in addition to her work as the Program Director for Humanities Advising.

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I'm a playwright, dramaturg, and teaching artist. It is here where you'll find my queries and musings on life, theater and the world. My posts advocate for diversity, inclusion, and equity in the American Theatre and updates on my own work. Please enjoy!